glasfase
Glasfase, or glass phase, refers to the non-crystalline, amorphous component of a material that lacks long-range atomic order. It may form a continuous matrix in glasses and glass-ceramics or appear as a dispersed phase within crystalline assemblages. The glass phase is characterized by short-range order rather than a repeating lattice.
In ceramics and glass-ceramics, the glasfase arises when a melt cools rapidly enough to suppress crystallization,
In geology, natural glasses such as obsidian are examples of a large glasfase; they form from lava
Properties and methods of study: The amorphous structure gives isotropy and broad chemical tolerance but can